hydrogen

English dictionary entry

Meanings

noun
  1. The lightest chemical element (symbol H), with an atomic number of 1 and atomic weight of 1.008.
  2. An atom of this element.
  3. Molecular hydrogen (sense 1; symbol H₂), a colourless, odourless and flammable gas at room temperature.
  4. A molecule of this molecular species.
  5. Synonym of protium (“the lightest and most common isotope of hydrogen (sense 1; symbol H, ¹H, or 11H), as contrasted with deuterium and tritium”).

Pronunciation

/ˈhaɪdɹəd͡ʒ(ə)n/ hī'drəjən [ˈhaɪd͡ʒɹəd͡ʒən] LL-Q1860 (eng)-Naomi Persephone Amethyst (NaomiAmethyst)-hydrogen.wav En-us-hydrogen.ogg

Word forms

hydrogen hydrogens

Etymology

Etymology tree Proto-Indo-European *wed- Proto-Indo-European *-r̥ Proto-Indo-European *wódr̥ Proto-Hellenic *údōr Ancient Greek ῡ̆̔́δωρ (hū̆́dōr) Ancient Greek ὑδρο- (hudro-)lbor. French hydro- Proto-Indo-European *ǵenh₁- Proto-Indo-European *-os Proto-Indo-European *ǵénh₁os Proto-Hellenic *génos Ancient Greek γένος (génos) Proto-Indo-European *-os Proto-Indo-European *-ēs Ancient Greek -ης (-ēs) Ancient Greek -γενής (-genḗs)lbor. French -gène French hydrogènebor. English hydrogen Borrowed from French hydrogène (“hydrogen”), coined by the French chemists Louis-Bernard Guyton de Morveau (1737–1816) and Antoine Lavoisier (1743–1794) from hydro- (prefix meaning ‘water’) + -gène (suffix denoting a producer of something), from the fact that water is produced as a compound when hydrogen is oxidized. * The prefix hydro- is borrowed from Ancient Greek ῠ̔δρο- (hŭdro-), from ῡ̆̔́δωρ (hū̆́dōr, “water”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *wed- (“water”). * The suffix -gène is borrowed from Ancient Greek -γενής (-genḗs, suffix meaning ‘born in a certain condition or place’), from γένος (génos, “descendant, offspring; race; etc.”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *ǵenh₁- (“to beget, produce; to give birth”)) + -ης (-ēs, suffix forming some third-declension adjectives). By surface analysis, hydro- (prefix meaning ‘water’) + -gen (suffix denoting a producer of something).

Translations

Abkhaz: аӡри Afrikaans: waterstof Albanian: hidrogjen Amharic: ሃይድሮጅን Arabic: هَيْدُرُوجِين Arabic: هِيدْرُوجِين Aragonese: hidrocheno Armenian: ջրածին Asturian: hidróxenu Azerbaijani: مولدالماء Azerbaijani: hidrogen Azerbaijani: müvəllidülma Basque: hidrogeno Belarusian: вадаро́д Belarusian: воднік Bengali: উদজান Bengali: হাইড্রোজেন Bhojpuri: उदजन Breton: hidrogen Bulgarian: водоро́д Burmese: ဟိုက်ဒရိုဂျင် Buryat: уһантүрэгшэ Carpathian Rusyn: гідроґе́н Carpathian Rusyn: во́день Catalan: hidrogen Cebuano: idroheno Cebuano: hidroheno Cherokee: ᏭᏓᏌᎧᎯᏴ ᎤᏃᎴ Chinese Cantonese: 氫 /氢 Eastern Min Chinese: 氫 /氢 Hakka Chinese: 氫 /氢 Chinese: 水素 Chinese: 氫 /氢 Chinese Mandarin: 氫 /氢 Wu Chinese: 氫 /氢 Chuvash: водород Cornish: hidrojen Corsican: idrogenu Czech: vodík Danish: hydrogen Danish: brint Dogri: उदजन Dutch: waterstof Erzya: ведь чачтый Esperanto: hidrogeno Estonian: vesinik Farefare: ko'om-walʋm Faroese: hydrogen Faroese: brint Faroese: loftevni Faroese: vatnevni Faroese: vetni Finnish: vety
This entry uses open data from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA/GFDL). Word forms are used for search and are not indexed as separate pages.